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Michael Coslo on Fri, 16 Mar 2007 09:42:30 CST wrote:
John Smith I wrote: wrote: However, if a new market comes forth, one composed of amateurs with little or no knowledge of CW and only using digital voice and digital data transmission--it would be market controlled also, and one would suspect it would self-correct and frown on the use of the bands for wasteful analog and cw communications. I would disagree. Those modes are not wasteful. On the other hand, a vision of using the HF bands for data transmission would indeed be a way of filling up our bands pretty quickly, and for not a lot of gain. If I'm interested in Data Transmission, I would design a system for frequencies where there is less natural noise - VHF and up. Then bandwidth issues would be less of a problem too. I disagree with both of you...:-) For one thing, 300 WPM equivalent data rate at 170 Hz "Spread" on HF does a credible job of sending text in only a half-KHz of bandwidth. The presumption is that "data" somehow MUST have "perfect" conditions to avoid errors is false. The BER or Bit Error Rate rules the show and is a function of noise and transmission rate (in units per second) and bandwidth. Claude Shannon used the example of a teleprinter signal on his seminal 1947 paper...which became boiled down to the more familiarly-known "Shannon's Law." That was 60 years ago and Claude wasn't considering OOK CW modes. :-) "Data" can have a wide BER range depending on the design of the data coding, all compared data systems having the same data rate, signal-to-noise ratio, and channel bandwidth. Forward Error Correction improves the BER but isn't an absolute necessity. An example is the ordinary modem we use on-line. If you have a human handset as well as the modem line, try picking up the handset and making random noise in it while the modem is on-line. That's an extreme case, but survivable without data disaster. You might be surprised at how well it can survive without messing up the screen. Let's face it, digital voice is the only way to go. I would disagree. What I have seen in digital voice so far offers no particular advantage over SSB, unless we are talking about digital for it's own sake. Most schemes that I have seen have some fatal flaws, such as the received transmission must be received in toto - IOW if you don't catch the beginning, you don't catch anything. I disagree with that and I have seen/heard many such systems but - certainly - not all of them. The digitized bit stream can be structured to enable a receiver to ID it and lock onto it quickly. It there are lots of tones in the multiplexed digital signal (such as with OFDM) that should be enough for an ID and lock-in. The solution to that would be channelizing HF, or assigning specific frequencies to Digital voice. In addition, unless there have been some big advances recently, The "big advances" have already come, like in the late 1980s. I'm mentioning a hint to the U.S. military SINCGARS in its digital mode (with or without frequency-hopping). DSSS essentially. Such can be slowed down or scaled to reduce its bandwidth without disabling intelligibility (no encryption needed or allowed by amateur regulations). Digital voice does not have any particular bandwidth advantages. Maybe not, but the decoded voice can be crystal clear all the way to the threshold point (where it breaks up suddenly). It sounds like an FM link with lots of amplitude variation, yet there isn't any decoded speach amplitude variation. A case in point is HDTV that we've had in this house for a year. I've put an attenuator in the TV cable line and NOT see a bit of difference in video nor hear any in the audio until there is lots of attenuation reaching the threashold of input. Give me a Digital voice mode that I can tune across the band and pick up a conversation at any point in the transmission, and a 1 KHz or less bandwidth signal, and then I'll be interested. Those are already in the works. And of course, I'll need to see that some other folks are buying the digital radios too, so I'll have people to talk to. Hmmm...what if they are thinking the same thing? :-) Case in point: PSK31, Peter Martinez' clever brainchild was spread all over Europe and tested by many on the Continent for four years before it was first publicized in ARRL publications. Not many in the USA were aware that PSK31 even existed, let alone proven under "field conditions." Publicity caused its spread over on this side of the pond. PSK is too slow for data transmission of LARGE and multi-megabyte amounts of data, end of story. Sorry, John, but you haven't justified any NEED for "large and multi-megabyte amounts of data" in the amateur bands below 30 MHz. Please think harder on how much data throughput CAN happen with existing data bandwidths and rates first. It is quite large, although that is in subjective terms. As for PSK, you are correct that it is too slow for data transmission. But that little 31 baud signal was never intended for Data transmission. It was intended for correctable text at a rate that a reasonably proficient typist could tap away at the keyboard in real time. Absolutely so and that was a design goal of G3PLX way back in the begining. Also a mode that can be efficiently operated at QRP and lover levels. And for that, it is an excellent mode. Not necessarily true. PSK31 is efficient in terms of bandwidth reduction versus data rate, still well within Shannon's Law, but it can be used at high RF powers just as easily as low RF powers. It seems to me to be Conventional Wisdom (a new form of "CW") that "high power" in USA amateur bands is associated only with OOK CW or SSB. All other modes seem to be ignored in the literature as a general rule. That's not a technical thing, just a subjective thing of the high-power types' desires. I've observed that most of them are ultra-conservative (as a general rule) insofar as mode use is concerned. Sometimes one has to look "outside the box" of Conventional [amateur] Wisdom to see where contemporary limits are in the practical, working sense. 73, Len AF6AY |
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